Thursday, March 25, 2010

Yeah! I have lettuce, spinach, radishes and some herbs sprouting in the cold frames! Should have some fresh lettuce to eat in April. I planted the seeds about two weeks ago when we had a warm spell and even with the temps back down below freezing at night they are toasty warm in their little greenhouse.

One of the easiest ways to live more sustainably is to grow some of your food and we have been busy adding gardens each year. The trouble with gardening in Ontario is the short growing season - frost dates for the area we live in are May7 - Oct 7 and last year we had a late frost the first week of June. An easy way of extending the season is with cold frames and so I had Jerry (hubby) build me some last year on the south side of the house by the garage. He used lumber that was kicking around, we picked up window glass at the re-use center for $5 each and with a "pattern" from the Four-Season Harvest book he produced three 4'x4' cold frames for me. It is important that they be facing south, that they be sloped back to front to the south and be covered with glass.

Last year we had fresh lettuce and herbs well into December and my cilantro and parsley overwintered in the cold frame and is starting to green up again, as is the corn salad (that big patch of green in the center cold frame). When the weather warms up I will move most of the herbs out to the herb garden and when this crop of lettuce is finished I plan to put some of my pepper plants and tomato plants in the cold frames for the summer. Last summer our pepper plants did not produce at all because it was so cool and wet. This year they get the hottest spot in the yard!

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

We had the fortune to have a wonderful designer work with us to create our home. Marina Fensham of thinkGiraffe Design paid attention to the smallest detail, things that we would have never thought about when designing a home. I asked her to incorporate as many of the design ideas from The Not So Big House by Susan Susanka. Our home is 1,780 square feet on one level and I wanted it to feel larger. The corner windows that create a diagonal view from the front door across the main room give the great room a very spacious feel.

The east window placed in line with the garage entrance 50' away at the other end of the house means that you are drawn to the light/window at the end of the corridor when you enter the house which is much better than walking into the laundry room like so many homes.

Our windows are usually the first thing that people notice - they are lower in our home than most houses. Most of our windows line up from one side of the house to the other, including our front and back doors creating a "see-through" kind of look. The second thing they notice is our black concrete floors. I wanted to be warm, and as we all know, black absorbs more heat. The downside, of course, is that it is painfully obvious just how much we humans, and our pets, shed skin and hair. I have learned to lower my cleaning standards!

The advantage of the lower windows is the outside can actually be viewed from the position you are normally in - which is sitting. So when I sit at my office desk in the hall the window is just above my desk offering me a view of my front gardens. In our bedroom we can sit in bed and have our morning tea while watching out over the back yard.

In the bathroom the window at tub level offers a wonderful view while bathing. In the living room the windows start at the floor and continue up 8' affording beautiful views of the backyard and the fields beyond.

Storage was very important to me as I hate clutter and wanted to be able to tuck everything away as much as possible. Marina designed the hall to incorporate a built in look with simple Ikea cabinets for books on one side and coats, linens and even space for a small office area tucked under a window on the other side.

A large pantry off the kitchen was insulated and houses the laundry, microwave, vita-mix and still has room for food storage and cleaning supplies. Keeping the noisy machines out of the kitchen was important with the open-concept main room. The kitchen cupboards mimic the style of our windows and are once again Ikea.
There are no closets in the house so instead we used Ikea wardrobes and cupboards either built in or free-standing. The custom built window seat adds even more storage in the form of 8 deep drawers.

One of my absolute musts was to have a covered porch that we planned to screen in so we could enjoy the outdoors. I had been to friends' country properties and quickly learned that the number of bugs would make sitting outside almost impossible. Our porch is an extension of the house in the summer and instead of screening we found mosquito curtains (mosquitocurtains.com) that are attached in the springtime with velcro along the top and snaps at the bottom and use magnets to close at the door opening. They keep our porch bug free while still allowing us to enjoy our backyard. We have even slept out on hot humid nights. In the fall we take down the curtains and fill the porch with our firewood for the winter.

Having lived with the house design for 4 years now would I change anything? Probably if I were to do it again I would not have the stairs to the basement open to the room upstairs (noise travels and our son is still living with us) and I would probably go with a walkout in the basement (both the designer and builder suggested we do it at the time of building) and now I can see how it would have been prudent to do to allow us more uses for the house.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Our home is a solar passive design which means by the careful placement and quantity of windows we use the sun to help heat our home in winter. On the north side there is only 4% of the total square footage of the house devoted to windows. On the south side there is 12% of the total square footage devoted to windows.

The sun is lower in the sky during the winter and enters 20’ into the house bathing the black concrete floors with sunlight. On sunny winter days the inside temperature is a cozy 23C° – 25C° with no additional heat source required. We use a high efficiency wood stove for cloudy days and nights and there is radiant in-floor tubing as additional backup. To heat with wood (the only renewable resource) usually costs about $500 if we have to pay for it.

In the summer the sun is higher in the sky and the wider 2’ overhang on the house keeps the sun from entering the house, the concrete floors stay nice and cool so that we require no air conditioning. We have three ceiling fans that see occasional use.

The building shell is Nudura insulated concrete forms – big Lego block Styrofoam forms that are joined together and then concrete is poured into the middle. The walls are 2” of Styrofoam on the outside, 6” of concrete and then another 2” of Styrofoam on the inside for an R value of 50+. The ceiling insulation is R40. This helps keep the house cool in summer and warm in winter. Our basement floor is insulated with 2” Styrofoam and this combined with the Nudura walls keeps the basement at 18-19C with no heating. There is radiant in-floor heating if we want to use it.

We produce most of our electricity from the 1740Watts of solar panels. During the day when we are producing more than we need the “green” energy flows out to the grid. At night when we are using more than we are producing we use energy from the grid. The dual meter tracks both inputs and outputs and we pay the difference. Our hydro bills average about $30 a month, most of which is service charges. We have an integrated battery backup which allows us to still have power in the event of a blackout for all critical appliances.

The average Canadian home uses 35Kw per day of electricity – we use between 5-10Kw – all CFL’s, Energystar appliances, 3 computers, two televisions, DVD players all on power bar. We have no dishwasher, clothes dryer, air conditioner.

We pre-heat our water with ten Thermomax solar collectors on the roof. The water is pumped from the well using a solar panel to power the pump into a 5,000 Litre cistern located under the porch, then is preheated from the Thermomax and topped up with a propane in-line water heater as needed. In the summer we often shower with water heated solely by the sun. Our propane for heating water and cooking averages about $75 per month.

The septic system is a gravity fed Ecoflow system using peat moss to filter the waste.

The metal roof allows us to collect cleaner rainwater into the rain barrels and we also have the ability, should it be required, to direct one of the downspouts into the cistern.

We further conserve water with dual-flush toilets, low-flow shower heads and a front-load washing machine.

Back in the 80's my husband started pushing us to consider the environment and how we lived. At the time most of his suggestions seemed to mean more work for me - the stay at home mom. Suddenly there were rain barrels instead of a hose to water my expansive gardens, suddenly I should be hanging clothes instead of using the dryer, walking or biking instead of using the car, composting scraps, using reuseable grocery bags and on and on. Every week there was a new suggestion. I admit at the time I balked at many of his suggestions - deep down I knew he was right but geesh did everything have to make more work for me?
I eventually came around to his way of thinking and enjoyed the benefits, using watering cans and rain barrels gave me some pretty good looking biceps - not to mention the walking and biking kept me in shape. Then in the early 90's my husband decided to go "veg". I could not get my head around it - he loved meat! loved sucking the marrow out of the bones much to my, and the kids, disgust. I figured it would not last but made sure to be supportive and to cook him things without meat while still cooking meat for myself and our two children. That meant some nights I had three different meals on the stove as invariably one of the kids did not like what I was cooking. It was VERY trying! He did not change his mind. He eventually wore me down. I read all the books he had read to make his decision and again I knew deep down he was right but I loved the taste of steak now and then. Reluctantly, I started cooking more and more vegetarian meals, introducing soy products that seemed like meat and while I still eat meat on occasion probably 90% of my diet is now vegetarian. We lived in the suburbs all this time and eventually put solar panels and a wind tower up on our home to produce some of our electricity but the property was not conducive to taking our sustainability much further.
In 2004 we bought property in a small community near the Grand River and built an eco home on our 1 1/2 acres. And so the adventure began...

About Me

Back in 2005 my husband and I left the big city, built an eco house in a small community and committed to living as sustainably as possible. Many people are interested in how we live and the choices we make so a blog seemed the best way to share our continuing adventures.